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New Government Reports Remind Washington That Budget Landscape Remains Uncertain

Kate Blakeley, a defense budget analyst at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, said the reports released by OMB and CBO illustrate how gridlocked Congress remains. "Right now, these reports on sequestration and the current BCA cap limits are a reminder that the BCA caps are still in force, and highlight the gulf that exists between the Senate and House [defense authorization] and appropriations bills," she said.

In the News

HASC Chairman Proposes Defense Strategy for Next President

The House Armed Services Committee chairman from Clarendon, Texas, co-authored the article with Andrew Krepinevich Jr., a national defense expert at Leesburg, Virginia-based Solarium and a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments. The piece offers their thoughts on a defense strategy the new president will need deploy to successfully protect the country and its interests.

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The ISIS War Has a New Commander – And ISIS May Be The Least Of His Worries

“It’s hard to imagine walking into a more difficult scenario than General MacFarland did last year,” said Peter Haynes, a retired Navy captain who is now a military strategist at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments in Washington. “However, I think General Townsend is walking into an even greater challenge.”

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Ramping up the Intensity of Underway Transfers

The developments will strengthen sea-basing capabilities, which sit at the heart of Expeditionary Force 21 — the Corps’ 10-year plan for dispersed operations. Sea basing, in turn, enables the necessary shift toward smaller, more distributed amphibious operations, said Bryan Clark, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments who previously served as special assistant to the chief of naval operations and director of his Commander’s Action Group...

In the News

A New War in the Pacific Could be ‘Trench Warfare’ at Sea

Andrew Krepinevich, the former CEO of the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, a Washington think tank with deep associations with the Pentagon and its secretive Office of Net Assessments, wrote in Foreign Affairs last year about planning for that capability. By deploying networks of ground-based long-range anti-air and anti-ship missiles up and down the first island chain, the U.S. and allies could deter China by convincing it that achieving air and sea control would be too costly, if achievable at all.